Ajiaco Colombiano (Colombian Chicken and Potato Soup)

Each region of Colombia has it own specialties and characteristic dishes. For example, in the capital of the country Bogotá; Ajiaco is a very popular dish.

There are different versions of Ajiaco Bogotano , but it’s usually made with chicken and three kinds of potatoes, corn and an herb called guascas. This herb gives the soup a wonderful flavor. It is very important to use guascas and papa criolla as they are the key ingredients in this dish. For me, Ajiaco is a feel-good comfort food.

Directions

In a large pot, place the chicken, corn, chicken bouillon, cilantro, scallions, garlic, salt and pepper. Add the water and bring to a boil, then reduce heat to medium and cook for about 35 to 40 minutes, until chicken is cooked and tender. Remove the chicken and set aside.

Continue cooking the corn for 30 more minutes. Discard green onion and add red potatoes, white potatoes, and the guacas. Cook for 30 more minutes.

Uncover and add the frozen papa criolla and simmer for 15 to 20 minutes, season with salt and pepper.

Cut the chicken meat into small pieces and return to the pot. Serve the Ajiaco hot with capers and heavy cream on the side.

It is Colombia, not Columbia.
Just to set it straight, this is the country on the tip north of South America….and their gastronomy is absolutely amazing. On the northern coast on the Caribbean they eat a lot of seafood served with coconut rice which gives just the right touch of sweet. Must try!!

I am preparing this dish for my son’s girlfriend, who is Colombian, for her birthday. What do you serve with the Ajiaco? I heard that it is typically served with avocado, capers, heavy cream and rice on the side. Is there a specific type of rice? What else? Thank you for this wonderful web site. I have truly enjoyed browsing through the recipes.

My wife is Colombian and she always adds a little salt, finely chopped white or yellow onion and about 2 – 3 finely chopped cloves of garlic all cooked with the rice.
My wife also combines a small bottle of non-pareil capers and some finely chopped onion (white) in a small serving dish so everyone can add it to their own taste. For the cream she uses the brand called La Lechera crema de leche (milk cream) by Nestle.
Hope this helps.

Guascas are “galinsoga parviflora,” a weed in North America that’s sometimes called Gallant Soldier. It is a nuisance around corn fields, and if you want to make an agricultural extension agent laugh, tell him (or her) that you *want* it because they’re accustomed to farmers who want to destroy it. But you shouldn’t gather it next to a corn field because it’s probably been sprayed. (That helpful advice is from the extension agent!) You can buy it dried at amigofoods.com and in Colombian stores in NY or Washington. Some people say that oregano is a good substitute but I don’t think so.

The frozen papa criolla work well for me, but the jarred ones (La Fe) have a chemical taste. When I don’t have papa criolla, I boil yukon gold potatos and then food-process them into a slurry that I add to the soup; I also use a packet of El Rey ajiaco seasoning.

erica, thank you so much for all of these recipes! my husband is colombian (i’m not) and he dearly, dearly, misses all of his favorite foods. these are wonderful, authentic recipes that i can’t wait to try out. i have read through many ajiaco recipes, and yours seems to be the closest to what we’re used to here in colombia. question: do the potatoes break down to thicken the soup, or do you mash them up a bit. (the ajiaco we eat seems to be thick and stew-like…)

Hi, I prepared this soup last night. It turned out delicious with a couple of tweaks. First, 1/3 cup of guascas was too much for our taste. We put all the potatoes together to cook. This allowed the papa criolla to break down and give the ajiaco that cloudy, thick texture. I served it with white rice, but the rice gets combined with the soup. Finally, we added aguacate to the soup after it was served. Yummy and we have lunch today! Thank you for the recipe!

One thing I would add to this recipe is fresh avocado as a side in the serving. The wonderful thing about Ajiaco is how it is prepared to be personally garnished at the table by each guest. In our family, we would remove the chicken and corn after cooking and put in a serving dish along with the capers, cream and fresh avocado. What is left is a flavorful chicken/potato soup. Then each person adds ingredients according to taste.

I am born in the USA but my family is originally from Bogota and this is definitely our signature dish. Thanks Erica for a great website. I have already sent my mom the recipe to make homemade almojabanas!

thanks so much for sharing this recipe! I LOOOOOVE ajiaco, in fact if it was up to me I’d make a huge pot of it every sunday and eat it 2 or 3 times a day for the whole week!! Sadly my husband likes variety so I end up only making it 4 or 5 times a year. I think this is one of those dishes that each family makes just a little differently so my mom’s recipe is a little different than yours. I’m going to make it your way next time, that way I can have my favorite and hubby can have his variety!

BTW–For those who live somewhere that it is hard to find papa criolla sometimes I cheat a little bit and just add some mashed potato flakes close to the end of the cooking time to thicken up the soup.

And guascas definitely grow here as a weed I remember my grandmother coming for a visit to NYC and shouting with glee when she found a patch of guascas growing wild amongst the weeds. She’d send us out there every couple of weeks to pick them so she could make us some ajiaco 🙂

My biological parents were both from Colombia and I was lucky enough to be adopted when I was 6. Anyway, my adopted parents are German so I never got to eat this soup after I left Colombia but I never forgot it. I searched all over the internet for this recipe and finally I have found that this recipe is the closest to the soup I remember.

I’m Colombian living in usa, yet I have no idea what guascas is, I eat ajiaco many times but never new what that guascas was, I thought it was the leave of the salary, we call it Apio, but I’m not sure, I’m also from Bogota so I don’t know if the recipe change which probably it does…. I’m trying to make it in a totally different way trying to adapt the dish as much as I can. this page was very helpful tho.

😀 do you guys have a recipe for Colombian Tamales from tolima or Bogota?

Good soup! Thank you for this recipe. I made it yesterday in our slow-cooker. We’re staying in Panama for a couple of months and my husband found the fresh guascas in the grocery store and I saw the papas criollas so then I needed a recipe. Recommendation: Don’t forget to serve with the cream or sour cream (I used a blend) and the capers — they elevate the soup from ordinary to memorable.

I’ve made ajiaco exactly once and thought it was about the best soup I’ve ever had, so had to come over for a look. I think the recipe I used was from Food and Wine, and I’m anxious to give this more authentic version a try. Now if I can just find that guacas! Thanks for the recipe. Pinned.

Love your recipe! My dad is Colombian and we made the recipe today. He had a recipe that called for milk in the soup. Have you heard of this? The milk was in addition to the heavy cream that was on top. Do you whip the cream. The cream in your picture almost looked like sour cream. It looked really thick. Did you use sour cream or a specific Colombian cream?

Delicious ! Although I agree with the people who say you should use a bit less guascas (1/3 cup is too strong for my taste) and put the creoles together with the other potatoes. Thanks for this recipie !

Hi I’m from Colombia and it’s the first time that I’m going to make this recipe here in United States, I just wanted to know if any of you had already make it in crock pot! And if you had, can u tell me your experience?

I was born in Colombia but moved to the States 50 years ago. Needless to say, I missed many of the typical dishes, ajiaco in particular. Every time I returned for a visit, my sister prepared for me the most delicious one as a special treat. Ever since I moved here I have looked for papas criollas, to no avail. The only ones I found were canned, and that was a different thing.
Well, about a week ago, I went to a Farmers Market here in Williamsburg, Virginia where I live, that is open once a week on Saturdays, and lo and behold, I finally saw papas criollas at a produce stand that belonged to a Mexican farmer senor Becerra. I couldn’t believe my eyes and was so happy that I bought almost the whole supply. Now that I have your recipe, I am going to try, and I am sure that my wife, who is “gringa”, is going to love it. I will report to you. So if anybody is looking for papas criollas, let me know.

If you’re stuck on guascas, try looking for “potato weed”- the scientific name is galinsoga parviflora. Or just make it without it. The Colombian version uses it, but the Cuban version of ajiaco doesn’t.

I made this recipe with minor alterations. Never been to Colombia (allthough I’ve tried Colombian burgers and several arepas so I know the food is great). Ordered guascas online, but if I should suggest a substitute it would be a combination of a small amount of peeled jerusalem artichokes (for a earthy note) and a little thyme (for herbyness). Jerusalem artichoke or white asparagus is probably as close as you can come, flavorwise.

I gave up on papas criollas which is impossible to get here in Europe so I used local flavorful potato varieties instead like “almond potato”. Turned out to be an awesome soup. Served some Ají on the side for extra kick but you really don’t need it.

Finding papas criollas outside of South America is extremely hard. I found a company in the USA that will ship them, but they want a frankly ridiculous price. They charge a fair price of $20USD for the potatoes, but another $110USD on top of that for shipping… and I live only about 300 miles away from their storefront. I thought about buying in bulk to try to make it worthwhile, but that extra $110 is stacked on top of every single instance you buy.

I’ve had luck using old Russet potatoes here in the states. Any potato that isn’t “waxy” will work – you want something that will basically dissolve if you cook it enough. Some people make mashed potatoes separately and then re-add that to the soup. I have luck enough using large, old potatoes.

I was fortunate enough to get to Colombia a couple of years ago, and the food there was so amazing. The worst part is knowing that I will probably never be there again – I went as part of a work trip, and I’m no longer in that job.

I found Colombia to be one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever been in my life. The weather was glorious! Cool, crisp, and rainy… just fresh air and wonderful green growing things everywhere. I spent the majority of my not-work time eating!

Ajiaco Bogotano is one of the best-kept secrets in the culinary world. I live in the Pacific Northwest of the USA, and we have demystified food from nearly every Asian and European cuisine. We have miles of restaurants from various African countries. We’re working on Eastern European cuisine now; I’ve seen borscht restaurants open with dumplings / pieroshkis / pierogies in various forms all over. I can walk down the street and get eight types of barbeque, nato, paella, and ugali. But for some reason, the cuisine of South American is largely overlooked here.

I currently have a large pot of ajiaco on the stove, thanks to this site. Thank you so much for helping me bring a tiny part of Colombia to my house!

The first dish I ever learned to make was Ajiaco. I lived in a room I rented from a couple and she was from Colombia. Yolanda made Ajiaco and showed me how to make it. I have made it ever since and this dish inspired my love of ethnic foods. She cooked the potatoes, corn and chicken together which created a lovely broth. We garnished with lime, avocado, cilantro and sour cream. I’m sure this was her “American” version as this was in the late seventies and I lived in a town that was not very ethnically diverse. We did not have specialty stores back then. Thank you for the memories and I think I will try to make the more authentic version this weekend.

I lived in Bogotá back in the 80’s and had Ajiaco every Monday. I now live in South Florida and we have good Colombian restaurants, so I get my fix!!! What I find missing is the AJÍ CASERO, a spicy vinaigrette which adds another layer of flavor! Maybe you have that recipe on your board! I will look for it as well as Mantecada!!
I love Colombia!!!

I remember eating this in someone’s home in the Old Town of Bogota, up in the hills in a very old Colonial home. They served it with crema, capers, and I believe what they called AJI which was close to a salsa or pico de gallo. I also think that there were also yuca as well as the various types of potatoes and the corn has to be what Americans call Cow Corn which gives the soup its characteristic flavor along w cilantro. It was really the culinary highlite of my trip and we went and ate everywhere…(although the horsemeat kabobs w a salt potato in Manizales were to die for and I ate many even when they told me it was horse…). Been looking at all the wonder recipes from Colombia and waxing nostalgic over them and all the amazing things Colombia has to offer.

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